Lectures - Thursdays, 7:35-9:30 - Harvard Yard, Harvard Hall, Room 104
Discussion Session - Sever Hall, 107 Thursdays, 6:30-7:30 | Teaching Assistants: Robert Burns and Zachary Zevitas
Class Schedule
Course Readings

Course Description:

     This introductory course will give students an integrated overview of the science of climate change and an analysis of the implications of this change for patterns of daily life in their own circumstance and around the world. Humankind is facing an unprecedented environmental crisis of global proportions. Scientists from across the world have issued stark warnings about the potential disruption and destabilization that changes in Earth’s climate will most likely cause in the near future for the life systems upon which modern civilization depends. The social and political implications of climate change have begun to become apparent as local communities in widely different parts of the world struggle to adapt to new patterns of excessive rainfall, prolonged droughts and severe weather events. Internationally, nation states have endeavored to forge diplomatic agreements to help humankind cope with both the causes and consequences of global climate change.

     This course has three principal objectives. First, it will introduce students to the science of climate change, drawing attention to the latest research and evolving pattern of scientific data that has emerged on climate in recent years. Second, emphasis will be given to analyzing the social changes and adaptations that human communities have already made and those they will most likely to have to make as the Earth’s climate continues to change in the coming years. Finally, specific attention will be given to the diplomatic efforts that have been launched since the creation of the Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCCC) during the first world-wide Earth Summit on the environment in Rio de Janeiro in June of 1992.


Course Schedule

Week 1
February 2

Introduction & Overview
  Timothy C. Weiskel
  Introduction to Course

Week 2
February 9

History of Climate Science
 

William R. Moomaw
The History of Climate Science and the Science of Climate History

   

Week 3
February 16

History of Climate Science
 

Timothy C. Weiskel
The Social Context of Scientific Knowledge

   

Week 4
February 23

A 'Southern' Perspective on Climate Change
  Dr. Adil Najam
   

Week 5
March 2

Monitoring & Modeling: The Ongoing Evidence
 

George E. Clark & Miriam Seltzer

   

Week 6
March 9

The Environmental Impact of Climate Change -1
  Dr. Paul Kirshen, Tufts University
 

Global and Local Water Issues

   

Week 7
March 16

The Environmental Impact of Climate Change - 2
 

Dr. Paul Epstein
Pests, Disease and Human Health

  Christopher Walker
Climate Change and the

Week 8
March 23

The Pace and Scope of Change
   Timothy C. Weiskel
  & Midterm Exam

Spring Break



Week 9
April 6

Social Impact of Climate Change: The North & The South
  Convergent Crises & The Sense of Grievance
 
[Note: brief Prospectus for Term Research Paper is Due.
See "Guidelines..".]
  Timothy Weiskel

Week 10
April 13

Social Impact of Climate Change:
  Political Repercussions in an Unstable World
  William Moomaw

Week 11
April 20

Social Impact of Climate Change - I
  Peter Goldmark, Environmental Defense Fund

Week 12
April 27

Social Impact of Climate Change - II
 

Professor James J. McCarthy

Week 13
May 4

Technological Options and Government Policy
 

Are Techincal "Fixes" Possible?
What do they Cost?
Who Makes Government Policy?

  William Moomaw & Timothy Weiskel

Week 14
May 11

Denial, Resistance and The Hidden Promise Embedded in the Climate Crisis
 

Week 15
May 18

Policy Alternatives: Institutional and Civil Society Initiatives
 

Michael Charney, Cambridge Citizen Activist
Sarah Creighton, Tufts University
Leith Sharp, Harvard University
Rosalie Anders, City of Cambridge



Week 16
May 25

Summation: Where can we go from here?
   
  & Final Exercise (see note below)
William Moomaw & Timothy Weiskel

Climate Change Headlines

 

Course Requirements

Requirements for the course include completing

1) a mid-term examination - Thursday, 23 March 2006 - (to count approximately 20% of the final grade):

2) a final exercise - Thursday, 25 May 2006 - (to count approximately 20% of the final grade);

3) class participation - (including classroom participation, where possible AND completion of all online class assignments, quizzes, etc. - to count approximately 20% of the final grade).

and

4) a brief Prospectus and Final Research Term Paper - to be submitted in writing, in class on or before Thursday, April 6, 2006 and Thursday, May 18, 2006, respectively . [That is, a brief prospectus for this paper must have been submitted by Thursday, April 6 2006, while the term paper itself is due on Thursday, May 18, 2006]. The Prospectus and the Research Term Paper will together account for approximately 40% of the final grade.

Further guidelines on the Midterm Exam, Final Exercise, Prospectus and Research Term Paper will be given in class and posted online when appropriate..

N.B. For the "Final Exam" you will have a choice to complete it in class or online. There will be no need for distance learners to arrange for a proctor.

 


Assigned Reading for the Course are drawn from:

Spencer Weart
 
2003
The Discovery of Global Warming (Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2003) [with support material.]
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, (IPCC)
  2001 Climate Change 2001: Working Group II: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, (IPCC, 2001).
National Assessment Synthesis
  2000 Climate Change Impacts on the United States The Potential Consequences of
Climate Variability and Change: Overview Report
(U.S. Global Change Research Program, 2000)
 Shaw, Jonathan
 
2002 
"The Great Global Experiment," Harvard Magazine.(November-December 2002) [or the HTML version ]
Elizabeth Kolbert
 
2006 
Field Notes from a Catastrophe (New York, Bloomsbury USA, 2006).
Jeremy K. Leggett
  2001 The Carbon War: Global Warming and the End of the Oil Era (N.Y., Routeledge, 2001).
Ross Gelbspan
  2004 Boiling Point: How Politicians, Big Oil and Coal, Journalists and Activists Are Fueling the Climate Crisis--And What We Can Do to Avert Disaster (New York, Basic Books, 2004).
Stephen H. Schneider (Editor), John O. Niles (Editor), Armin Rosencranz (Editor)
  2002 Climate Change Policy: A Survey (Washington, D. C., Island Press, 2002).
Athanasiou, Tom & Paul Baer
  2002 Dead Heat: Global Justice and Global Warming (New York, Seven Stories Press, 2002).
 
Recommended

Tony Blair (Foreword), Hans Joachim Schellnhuber (Editor), Wolfgang Cramer (Editor), Nebojsa Nakicenovic (Editor), Tom Wigley (Editor), Gary Yohe (Editor), Rajendra Pachauri (Introduction)
  2006 Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2006).
[PDF version]
 
     
The Unassigned, Required Reading & Listening/Viewing

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